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Exiles in America by Christopher Bram — book cover

Exiles in America

by Christopher Bram
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Overview

Zack Knowles, a psychologist, and Daniel Wexler, an art teacher at a college in Virginia, have been together for twenty-one years. In the fall of 2002, a few months before the Iraq War, a new artist in residence, Abbas Rohani, arrives with his Russian wife, Elena, and their two children. But Abbas is not quite what he seems, and he begins an affair with Daniel. Soon politics intrude upon two families thrown together by love, threatening the future of both in ways no one could have predicted.

A novel that explores how the personal becomes political, Exiles in America offers an intimate look at the meaning of marriage, gay and straight.

Synopsis

Zack Knowles, a psychologist, and Daniel Wexler, an art teacher at a college in Virginia, have been together for twenty-one years. In the fall of 2002, a few months before the Iraq War, a new artist in residence, Abbas Rohani, arrives with his Russian wife, Elena, and their two children. But Abbas is not quite what he seems, and he begins an affair with Daniel. Soon politics intrude upon two families thrown together by love, threatening the future of both in ways no one could have predicted.

A novel that explores how the personal becomes political, Exiles in America offers an intimate look at the meaning of marriage, gay and straight.

Publishers Weekly

Bram uneasily weds religion and the politics of sexual orientation in his tepid eighth novel. Daniel Wexler, 47, and Zachary Knowles, 48, together for 21 years, live in Williamsburg, Va., where Daniel teaches painting at William and Mary College and Zack maintains a psychiatry practice. The other, more literal, exiles are Abbas and Elena Rohani. A painter, Abbas is a visiting faculty member at the college and embodies the swarthy, omnisexual, selfish and impossibly handsome artist stereotype. Daniel's initial artistic jealousy of Abbas turns into an attraction that, thanks to the convenient open status of everyone's relationships, barrels toward consummation. The affair becomes more intense than intended, precipitating pages of fights between Daniel and Zack. It also crystallizes the unlikely alliance between Zack and Elena. After the affair founders, the FBI begins investigating Abbas's relationship with his brother, sparking even more emotional turmoil, but the novel falls short of its dramatic potential. (Sept.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Christopher Bram

Christopher Bram is the author of eight other novels, including Gods and Monsters (originally titled Father of Frankenstein), which was made into an Academy Award-winning film. Bram was a 2001 Guggenheim Fellow and received the 2003 Bill Whitehead Award for Lifetime Achievement. He lives in New York City.

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Editorials

Washington Post Book World

"The predicaments Bram has set up for his characters are interesting . . . [and] compelling."

Genre

"Potent and intoxicating…sexy, riveting and psychologically satisfying."

USA Today

"What is love?. . . [Bram’s] enthralling . . . story challenges us to broaden our search for answers."

The Guide

"A major ‘gay novel’—however you define that…Bram pulls it off…empathetic and enlightening, politically savvy and emotionally sophisticated."

The Advocate

"Christopher Bram’s latest novel, Exiles in America, is so compulsively readable it’s easy to overlook its brimming wisdom."

Providence Sunday Journal

"This intricate, emotionally layered novel is one of the best I’ve read in years…brilliant, soul-wrenching, heart-penetrating."

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2007
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
384
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780061138355

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